The first Christians left behind a handbook for following Jesus. This is it. Lost for more than a thousand years and rediscovered by lamplight in a Constantinople library, the Didache is the earliest surviving guide to the Christian life — older than much of the New Testament itself. It was written for ordinary people learning to pray, to give, to forgive, and to gather as a community. And it still speaks. This edition does two things at once. It gives you a fresh, readable rendering of the complete ancient text, and it walks beside you with seventeen short, warm chapters that open the meaning of each part and bring it home to daily life. Inside you will find • The Two Ways — the way of life and the way of death, and why the earliest believers taught it first • Practical teaching on prayer, fasting, money, mercy, and refusing to carry a grudge • The shape of community — baptism, the shared table, honest work, and how to tell a true teacher from a false one • A “For Today” reflection ending every chapter, turning ancient wisdom into present-day practice • A small-group discussion guide and a ten-part sermon series built for pastors and church planters Who it is for For the believer weary of following Jesus in isolation. For the pastor searching for the oldest blueprint of how a church orders its life. For the church planter who wants roots that reach all the way back to the apostles. And for anyone drawn to the quiet authority of the people who walked closest to the beginning. Read slowly, and read expectantly. The two ways still stretch out before you — and the way of life is waiting.